Managerial Epidemiology: Week 6
Chapter 13
Epidemiologic Aspects
of Work and the
Environment
Learning Objectives
• Define the term environmental epidemiology
• Give examples of environmental agents that are associated with human health effects
• Provide examples of study designs used in environmental epidemiology
• State methodologic difficulties with research on environmental health effects
Environmental Epidemiology
• Study of disease and health
conditions (occurring in the
population) that are linked to
environmental factors
• Environmental exposures—outside
the control of the exposed individual
Two Examples of Environmental
Catastrophes
• Deepwater Horizon oil spill, Gulf of
Mexico, April 20 to July 15, 2010
• Fukushima nuclear reactor meltdown
following earthquake in Japan, March 11,
2011
Human Exposures to
Environmental Hazards
• Chemical agents
• Electromagnetic radiation
• Ionizing radiation
• Heavy metals
• Air pollution
• Temperature increases from global
warming and climate change
Health Effects Attributed to
Environmental Exposures
• Cancer
• Infertility
• Reproductive impacts
• Infectious diseases such as malaria
• Occupation-specific adverse
outcomes
Study Designs Used
• Descriptive study designs
– Helpful for setting priorities
– Hypothesis formulation
• Analytic study designs
– Effects of low-level exposures
– Exposure-effect relationships
– Retrospective cohort designs
Hazardous Agents in the Work
Environment
• Ionizing radiation
• Infectious agents
• Toxic substances
• Drugs
• Carcinogenic agents
Health Effects Associated with
Work Environment
• Health risks for pregnant workers and
the unborn fetus
• Various lung diseases
• Dermatologic problems
• Bladder cancer among dye workers
• Leukemia among workers exposed to
benzene
Study Designs Used in
Environmental Epidemiology
• Descriptive studies provide information
for setting priorities, identifying hazards,
and formulating hypotheses for new
occupational risks.
• Etiologic studies can be used to show
exposure-effect relationships.
Retrospective Cohort Studies
• Various end points are used to study
the effects of occupational exposures.
– Morbidity: self-reports of symptoms and
results of clinical examinations
– Mortality: comparison of mortality rates
of exposed workers with nonexposed
workers in the same industry
Collection of Exposure Data • Employment records often are used
and may include:
– Personal identifiers to permit record
linkage
– Demographic characteristics
– Work history
– Information about potential confounding
variables, e.g., medical history, smoking
habits
The Healthy Worker Effect
• Observation that employed
populations tend to have a lower
mortality experience than the general
population.
• The healthy worker effect may reduce
the measure of effect for an exposure
that increases morbidity or mortality.
Ecologic Study Designs
• One use is the study of the health effects of air pollution.
• Researchers measure the association between average exposure to air pollution within census tracts and the average mortality in those census tracts.
• Unable to controI for individual factors, e.g., smoking habits
Case-Control Studies
• Compared with cross-sectional
study designs, case-control studies
can provide more complete
exposure data.
• However, precise quantitation of
exposure and unobserved
confounding may be difficult to
achieve.
Toxicologic Concepts Related
to Environmental Epidemiology
• Dose-response
• Threshold
• Latency
• Synergism
Dose-Response Curve
• Graph that is used to assess the
effect of exposure to a chemical or
toxic substance upon an organism.
Threshold
• The lowest dose at which a
particular response may occur
Latency
• The time period between initial exposure and a measurable response
• Latency can range from seconds (acute toxic agents) to years (mesothelioma).
• The long latency of health events in environmental research makes the detection of hazards difficult.
Synergism
• A situation in which the combined effect of several exposures is greater than the sum of the individual effects.
• Example: Study conducted among asbestos insulation workers demonstrated a synergistic relationship between asbestos and smoking in causing lung cancer.
Types of Agents
• Chemical agents
• Metallic compounds
• Electric and magnetic fields
• Ionizing radiation
• Allergens and molds
• Dusts
• Physical and mechanical energy
Chemical Agents
• Many types used at home and at
work
–Household cleaning agents
–Automotive chemicals
–Paints
–Pesticides
–Bisphenol A (BPA) in plastics
Chemical Agents (cont’d)
• Potential effects on human health
through acute toxicity, direct skin
irritation, contact dermatitis, or
long-term effects such as cancer
Pesticides: Used to Control
Pests
• Insecticides
• Herbicides
• Rodenticides
Four Classes of Insecticides
• Organophosphates
• Organocarbamates
• Pyrethroids
• Organochlorides
(organochlorines)
Organochloride Insecticides
• DDT
– Toxic to wildlife and persistent in
the environment
• Lindane
• Chlordane
Chemical Agents (cont’d)
• Asbestos
– Strictly speaking, a mineral fiber
– Was used commonly for ship building, construction, insulation, and automobiles
– Associated with asbestosis, mesothelioma, and lung cancer
Metallic Compounds
• Arsenic
• Mercury
• Lead
Metallic Compounds (cont’d)
• Arsenic
– A crystalline metalloid
– Exists as inorganic compounds in the
environment
– Many uses
• Used as a preservative for residential
lumber outlawed
– Potential carcinogen, e.g., bladder
cancer
Metallic Compounds (cont’d)
• Mercury
– Used for the treatment of syphilis, as an agricultural fungicide, and in dental amalgams
– Responsible for Minamata disease, which occurred in the mid-1950s in Minamata Bay, Japan
• A neurological condition linked to the
consumption of fish contaminated with
mercury
Metallic Compounds (cont’d) • Lead
– Once widely used in paint and gasoline
– Associated with serious central nervous system effects even at low levels
– Has adverse effects on intelligence,
behavior, and development
– Between 1988 and 2002, percentage of
children with elevated blood lead levels declined steeply
Electric and Magnetic Fields
• Sources include power lines, microwave ovens, stoves, clocks, cellular phones.
• Los Angeles and Swedish studies found an association between residential proximity to power lines and childhood cancer risk.
• U.S. and Norwegian studies found an increased risk for male breast cancer among male electrical workers.
Ionizing Radiation
• Consists of either particle energy (e.g., highly energetic protons, neutrons, and α and β particles) or electromagnetic energy (e.g., γ-rays and X-rays)
• Sources of ionizing radiation can be natural or synthetic.
Ionizing Radiation (cont’d)
• Natural sources--examples are radon and cosmic rays.
– Radon is one of the largest sources of human exposure to ionizing radiation and may be the cause of about 21,000 deaths from lung cancers in the U.S.
• Synthetic sources--examples are medical x-rays and nuclear generators.
Allergens and Molds
• Allergens--substances that provoke
an allergic reaction in susceptible
individuals
• Allergic reactions range from
dermatitis, asthma, and itchy eyes to
anaphylactic shock.
Physical and Mechanical
Energy
• Include agents associated with
unintentional injuries
• Unintentional injuries are a leading cause
of death within the age group 1-44 years
in the U.S.
• Also include such factors as noise,
vibration, and extremes of temperature
Global Warming
• Possible association with extreme
heat waves
• Climate changes in the eastern
U.S.
• Deaths associated with heat
waves
Monitoring and Surveillance of
Occupational Hazards • Hazard surveillance--characterization of known
chemical, physical, and biologic agents in the
workplace
• Sentinel health event--a case of unnecessary
disease, unnecessary disability, or untimely
death whose occurrence is a warning signal
that the quality of preventive or medical care
may need to be improved
Environmental Hazards Found
in the Work Setting
• Biologic hazards--Hospital employees, sewage workers, and agricultural workers may be exposed to hazardous biologic agents. For example, HIV may infect hospital workers through accidental needle sticks.
• Mineral and organic dusts--Examples include coal dust (mining and black lung disease) and rubber dust (COPD).
Environmental Hazards Found
in the Work Setting (cont’d)
• Vapors and fumes are likely to become
increasing hazards due to the growing use
of chemical substances.
• Vapors--Include organic solvents such as
benzene, which may cause cancer and
damage internal organs (particularly the
liver)
Mineral and Organic Dusts
• Silicosis
• Pulmonary emphysema
• Chronic obstructive disease
• Coal workers’ pneumoconiosis
Industrial Chemicals
• Exposure in occupational settings
is up to 100 times higher than in
the ambient environment.
• Vinyl chloride—angiosarcoma of
the liver
• Pesticides
Noteworthy Community
Environmental Health Hazards
• Hazardous waste sites
• Air pollution
• Nuclear facilities
• Drinking water
Sick Building Syndrome
• Dryness of the skin and mucous
membranes
• Mental fatigue
• Headaches
• Symptoms diminish when affected
person leaves the building.
Hazardous Waste Sites
• Notorious sites in the U.S. include: Love Canal, NY; Valley of the Drums, KY; Times Beach, MO; Stringfellow acid pits, CA; Casmalia Waste Disposal Facility, CA.
• Of great concern is the contamination of water supplies by toxic wastes.
• Some possible adverse effects of hazardous waste exposure include birth defects, neurologic disease, and cancer.
Air Pollution
• Constituents of air pollution include sulfur oxides, particles, ozone, and lead and other heavy metals.
• Lethal air pollution episodes have occurred worldwide.
• Studies conducted in New York City, St. Louis, and Tennessee have shown a correlation between increases in daily mortality and increased air pollution.
Environmental Tobacco
Smoke (ETS)
• Nonsmokers who work in a smoking environment have reduced pulmonary function compared to nonsmokers in a smoke-free work environment.
• ETS causes 3,000 lung cancer deaths annually among nonsmokers.
• ETS is associated with children’s
bronchitis, pneumonia, and asthma.
Nuclear Facilities
• Include weapons production plants, test sites, and nuclear power plants
• Studies of living in close proximity to nuclear installations have shown conflicting results regarding cancer rates.
– Following the Chernobyl nuclear power plant accident, thyroid cancer rates increased near the reactor.
Drinking Water
• Chemical plants and nuclear facilities
may contaminate ground water.
• Chlorination of water supply has helped
to decrease the incidence of
gastroenteric diseases.
• Lead and asbestos particles may be
present in water and have potential for
toxicity.